Kleiman v. Needle

117 A. 3, 140 Md. 107, 1922 Md. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 A. 3 (Kleiman v. Needle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kleiman v. Needle, 117 A. 3, 140 Md. 107, 1922 Md. LEXIS 18 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

*108 Pattisoít, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Oonrt.

By the prayer of the bill in this case the court was asked to set aside and annul a sale, at public auction, to the appellees of certain leasehold property, known as No. 220 N. Holliday Street, in the City of Baltimore, and to require the appellants to refund one thousand dollars, paid as a deposit on tlie sale.

The appellants, Sigmund Kleinian and Uinnie Kleinian, his wife', were the owners of the above mentioned leasehold property, and, desiring to sell it, they, through E. T. Newell and Company, auctioneers, advertised it, at public auction, to be sold on the 1st day of December, 1920. The improvements upon the property consisted of a four story building used for business purposes, each story being occupied by different tenants.

. The appellees, Samuel Needle and Jacob L. Cardin, together with Simon Needle, hrother of Samuel, attended the sale, and Simon, for and on behalf of himself, Samuel and Cardin, bid upon said property, and it was struck off to him, at and for the sum of $15,500. He gave to the auctioneer, Ernest T. Newell, his individual check for $1000 as a deposit, and signed a paper writing in which he acknowledged purchasing said property at and for the sum named.

It is claimed by the appellees that at the time of the sale, the auctioneer announced that the aggregate annual rentals from said property at that time amounted to $2400. This claim is supported not only by the evidence of each of the appellees and Simon Needle, but also by the auctioneer himself, and is denied only by tlie appellant, Sigmund Kleinian, who testified that the announcement was that the annual rental of the property when the settlement was to be made therefor, sixty days after the day of sale, would be $2400.

The day after the sale, on December 2nd, the appellees and Simon Needle met, and, after discussing the- sale, Simon Needle agreed to sell, and the appellees agreed to buy, his interest in the property acquired under the sale, which is spoken of by them as bis profits, at and for $150, and the *109 appellees gave him their cheek for $1150, $1000 of which was to- reimburse him for the $1000 which he, o-n the clay before, had, by his check, paid to the auctioneer as- deposit; and $150 was paid to him for his interest in the profits.

When this was done, Samuel Needle, either on the same day or the following day, called upon William Penrose, an attorney of the Baltimore bar, to have him examine the title to the property bought by the appellees, and, in the course of their conversation in connection therewith, it was suggested by Samuel Needle that if Mr. Penro-sei desired they would permit him to come in with them in the purchase of the property, at the time telling him o-f the announcement made at the sale that the aggregate rentals of the property were $2400 a year. Later in the day Mr. Penrose went to look at the property, it being o-nly a short distance from his office, and while there learned that the aggregate annual rentals at that time were but $2040, and upon his return to his office he called Samuel Needle o-ve-r t-he ’p-hone-, telling him of what he had learned in respect to the rental of s-aicl property.

On the next day Samuel Needle and Cardin called upon one or more of the tenants of the property and verified the information communicated to them by Penrose as to the amount of the annual rentals received therefor. They then called upon Simon Needle and demanded the return of the money paid by them to him,. He referred them to Mr. Newell, the auctioneer, to whom he- had paid $1000 o-f the money demanded of him. It was then that they called upon Newell and demanded of him the: return of the $1000, basing their demand upon the misrepresentation made by him at the sale as to the extent o-f the aggregate annual rentals received for the property.

He admitted to them that he had made the- announcement, and stated that he had done so upon the- statement, and at the suggestion, o-f Mr. Kleiman; and that he had on that day, about an hour before, given to Kleiman his check for the amount received hv him, less his and the- advertising *110 charges in connection with the sale. He, however, called up Kleinian and told him of the position talcen by the appellees in relation to the alleged misrepresentation made by him at the sale in respect to the amount of the aggregate annual 'rentals received at that time for the property, and asked him not to use the check. Kleiman replied, as Newell testified, that “he thought the rentals would be $2400 by the time the purchasers were to take title to the property,” which he claimed was sixty days after the day of sale, that he, in fact, “had made some partial arrangements with either his tenants or prospective tenants or through some other means; by which the rentals at the time title was had to the property * * * would be $2400.” Newell at the same time called up the bank, upon which he had given the check, and asked them to withhold payment of it, but the bank overlooked his direction and the check when presented to> it was paid.

The record, however, discloses that, on' February 1st, sixty days after the day of sale, the rent then being received therefor would, if continued, amount to an annual rental of $2400. This increase of rental was produced by increasing the rent of the second floor tenant, Dietrich, from thirty dollars per month, the amount, as stated in the brief of the appellants’ counsel, that Dietrich was paying on the day of sale, to sixty dollars per month, the permanency and bona fides of which was assailed by the appellees.

The court, at the conclusion of the evidence, by its decree passed on the 30th day of April, 1921, set aside and annulled the sale, and ordered the defendants to return to the plaintiffs the deposit of one thousand dollars, as prayed for in the bill. It is from that decree that the appeal in this case is taken.

The sole question to be determined upon this appeal is whether the appellees, plaintiffs below, were entitled to have the sale herein mentioned set aside, and to have the court order and direct the appellants, defendants below, to pay to them the sum of one thousand dollars, paid by them as a *111 deposit, because of tbe alleged misrepresentation made at the sale by Newell, the auctioneer.

In the recent case of Needle v. Cover, 138 Md. 646, the procedure was the same as in this case. In that case Cover, the purchaser, bought certain leasehold property near where thei property in this case is located. At the sale certain misrepresentations were made as to the time the tenancies of those occupying' the building bad to run, which misrepresentations, it is alleged, induced the purchaser to buy, which he would not have done had such misrepresentations not been made. Cover, the purchaser, had paid a deposit of two thousand dollars, and upon the refusal of Needle, the vendor, to return to him the money, Cover filed his. bill asking that the sale he annulled and set aside, and that Needle refund to him the money he paid as a deposit.

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Bluebook (online)
117 A. 3, 140 Md. 107, 1922 Md. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kleiman-v-needle-md-1922.